JavaMuseum Interview Project

javamuseum

To make a selection of ongoing works represents always an experiment, which can be, on the other side, influenced positively by encouraging people/users to get involved. JavaMuseum received a number of submissions which were set up in locally restricted languages like Italian, Portugues, Spanish, French, German etc, mostly without a bi-lingual approach, so that it was hardly possible, at all, to value such submissions properly. This shows generally a certain problem of text based works, and especially blogs, which represent a popular publishing format, on one hand, but on the other hand one is forced to focus on the majority of all users, the English speaking ones. Nevertheless, a few of such submissions were included in the selection as a kind of tribute to the country Argentina. The JavaMuseum show will be launched in November in the framework of NewMediaFest 2007 - www.newmediafest.org the 1st common festival of [NewMediaArtProjectNetwork]:||cologne www.nmartproject.net which has a physical partner, and this already for the 3rd time, i.e 3rd Digital Art Festival Rosario/Argentina - Read more on http://www.newmediafest.org/blog/?p=17 Wilfried Agricola de Cologne - JavaMuseum - Forum for Internet Technology in Contemporary Art - www.javamuseum.org - See also selection results - http://www.javamuseum.org/blog/?p=37

Babel (UK)
Tauvydas Bajarkevicius (Lithuania)
Raheema Beegum (India)
Hans Bernhard (Austria)
JR Carpenter (Canada)
Antony Carriere (USA)
Dylan Davies (USA)
Ryan Gallagher (USA)
Fabian Giles (Mexico)
Ellie Harrison (USA)
Gita Hashemi (Canada)
Jeremy Hight (USA)
Alexander Jancijevic (Canada)
Richard Jochum (USA)
Seth Keen (Australia)
Kyon (Germany)
Yvonne Martinsson (Sweden)
Vytautas Michellevicius (Lithuania)
Alex Perl (USA)
Karla Schuch Brunet (Brazil)
Robert Sloon; (South Africa)
Michael Szpakowski (UK)
Andres Torres (Chile)
Matthew Williamson; (USA)
Salvatore Iaconesi (Italy)
Juan Manuel Patiño; (Argentina)